Homeland Security Ate My Speech
"A literary grandmaster"
- Time"One of the greatest novelists coming out of Latin America."
- Newsweek"A worthy addition to the library of resistance."
- Kirkus"Dorfman's critique is personal, intellectual, devastating, and at times bitingly funny."
- New York Journal of Books"A world novelist of the first order."
- The Washington Postabout the bookabout
Combining elements of memoir, political theory, satire, and literary criticism, literary legend Ariel Dorfman's latest book is an emotionally raw yet measured assessment of the United States after the election of Donald Trump, highlighting the troubling parallels between Trump and repressive regimes of the past. Specifically, Dorfman relates the election of Trump to the CIA-led coup that installed Pinochet as dictator in Chile: an event that upended Dorfman's life, as well as the fate of the country. With corruption and repression looming, he wonders, can the United States avoid the same kind of political interference it practiced in the past?
Reflecting Dorfman's virtuosity across genres, the essays of Homeland Security Ate My Speech are concise, yet highly original and playful; one takes the form of a letter from a sixteenth-century King of Spain to Donald Trump, praising him for his intolerance, and urging a revival of the Inquisition, while another begins with Dorfman's memory of seeing a monster movie as a child ("I can remember gripping my mother's hand tight") and segues into a thoughtful meditation on how America created Trump via Mary Shelley's novel Frankenstein. Dorfman brings a rich array of literary references to his discussion of America's current malaise; other authors he invokes include Faulkner, Shakespeare, Cervantes, Melville, Lewis Carroll, and Dave Eggers.
"[Dorfman] has written movingly and often brilliantly of the cultural dislocations and political fractures of his dual heritage." - The New York Times
About The Author / Editor
in the media
Homeland Security Ate My Speech
"A literary grandmaster"
- Time"One of the greatest novelists coming out of Latin America."
- Newsweek"A worthy addition to the library of resistance."
- Kirkus"Dorfman's critique is personal, intellectual, devastating, and at times bitingly funny."
- New York Journal of Books"A world novelist of the first order."
- The Washington Postabout the bookabout
Combining elements of memoir, political theory, satire, and literary criticism, literary legend Ariel Dorfman's latest book is an emotionally raw yet measured assessment of the United States after the election of Donald Trump, highlighting the troubling parallels between Trump and repressive regimes of the past. Specifically, Dorfman relates the election of Trump to the CIA-led coup that installed Pinochet as dictator in Chile: an event that upended Dorfman's life, as well as the fate of the country. With corruption and repression looming, he wonders, can the United States avoid the same kind of political interference it practiced in the past?
Reflecting Dorfman's virtuosity across genres, the essays of Homeland Security Ate My Speech are concise, yet highly original and playful; one takes the form of a letter from a sixteenth-century King of Spain to Donald Trump, praising him for his intolerance, and urging a revival of the Inquisition, while another begins with Dorfman's memory of seeing a monster movie as a child ("I can remember gripping my mother's hand tight") and segues into a thoughtful meditation on how America created Trump via Mary Shelley's novel Frankenstein. Dorfman brings a rich array of literary references to his discussion of America's current malaise; other authors he invokes include Faulkner, Shakespeare, Cervantes, Melville, Lewis Carroll, and Dave Eggers.
"[Dorfman] has written movingly and often brilliantly of the cultural dislocations and political fractures of his dual heritage." - The New York Times
About The Author / Editor